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Right to Clean Water backers restart effort to get it on the 2026 ballot

Mass fish kills show the ugly side of the Bay. Carcasses pile up on the shores of Big Bayou Bay, St. Petersburg.
Eric Higgs
/
Courtesy
Mass fish kills show the ugly side of the Bay. Carcasses pile up on the shores of Big Bayou Bay, St. Petersburg.

It's called the Right to Clean and Healthy Waters amendment. It would amend the constitution and compel state environmental officials take action to clean up Florida's waters.

Joseph Bonasia of Fort Myers is chairman of the nonprofit group. He said they began their effort on Earth Day 2022, but only collected about 100,000 signatures. He said this time, they have hundreds of volunteers passing out petitions and will start raising money to get the word out about the amendment.

“I don't want people thinking that it's going to be such a far reach,” Bonasia said. “Over the last two years, we have also gathered the support of over 200 organizations and businesses, and even some local governments.”

READ MORE: A quest to get an amendment guaranteeing a right to clean water pushed back

He said Florida is the only state that is pursuing this not through their legislature, but through a citizen's initiative.

“This is a burgeoning movement,” Bonasia said. “There are about 20 states in the nation that are pursuing amendments kind of like ours. There are two that had them in their amendments since the 1970s, that would be Pennsylvania and Montana.”

They need more than 900,000 signatures to get it on the 2026 ballot.

The push comes as Florida's waterways have been in the news in the past several years. Red tide, blue-green algae outbreaks, and green-tinged springs have resulted in massive fish kills, starving manatees, and cloudy freshwater springs.

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Steve Newborn